The Second Wave
Thirty-odd years ago, evangelical Protestants in the United States rediscovered classical Christian education, and today the national movement is in full swing, with hundreds of schools and, by now, thousands of young graduates. "In the beginning," so to speak, there was an essay by Dorothy Sayers, a book or two by Doug Wilson, and some conferences with a few hundred people. How far we've come, now that books like this one are being written, digested, critiqued and built upon by today's classical Christian schools. This book is a "second wave" work of the movement, grappling as it does with the limitations -- and even historical misunderstandings (gasp!) -- of the Dorothy Sayers essay that started so much. (On a bad day, a classical education enthusiast will quote Dorothy Sayers as if she were the final authority on education, when in fact she never saw herself that way at all and never had any idea her words would ignite an educational movement forty years later.)
If you're new to classical education, don't start with the books from twenty years ago; start with this one. If you've been around the movement a long time and feel like you really understand it already, you definitely need to read this book to have your original curiosity and drive for classical education reawakened. You need to be reminded that "classical" is not a system or set curriculum that can be perfected; rather, it is a body of knowledge and ideas and, to a lesser extent techniques (an important point these authors make) that gives an great foundation and starting place for education, but leaves a tremendous variety of options for implementation. So get back to work!
If you're new to classical education, don't start with the books from twenty years ago; start with this one. If you've been around the movement a long time and feel like you really understand it already, you definitely need to read this book to have your original curiosity and drive for classical education reawakened. You need to be reminded that "classical" is not a system or set curriculum that can be perfected; rather, it is a body of knowledge and ideas and, to a lesser extent techniques (an important point these authors make) that gives an great foundation and starting place for education, but leaves a tremendous variety of options for implementation. So get back to work!
1 Comments:
Dear Foole,
we thank you for your words - and feel happily instructed by them. To the point that we may even delve at last into Rasselas; Boswell's pre-Life work (whose title we will re-check shortly), and The Second Wave. These heady notions incited by your discourse on Asimov's Foundation and the perfect picture of another book maturing on your shelf until it reached the point of reading readiness. (to steal a phrase from a different field altogether.) Thank you for this newly discovered treasure trove - and Massive Respect to a long-time blogger.
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